Over the years, TeachersFirst has created a number of
lessons and instructional units that have proven popular with our users.
While these are all listed in the various TeachersFirst subject pages,
we have also listed them here. We hope this list will simplify searching
for those of you who have used these resources in the past, and that
they will provide new users with a quick introduction to some of the
material available on our site.
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Defining
Middle Eastern Borders - TeachersFirst's comprehensive Middle
East resource examines the interplay of cultural, political, economic,
and religious borders in the mideast from the mid-nineteenth century
to the present. This "Teachers Tool Kit" offers a wealth
of primary sources, guiding questions, and an interactive timeline,
all geared to helping students understand the underlying issues
and tensions that have made stability in the mideast so elusive
for over a century. Teachers can use these resources as a complete
unit, or as part of their own curriculum. |
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| Who Did It?
is a multi-part science unit for middle or high school students
that uses "crime" analysis and forensics to teach and
reinforce basic laboratory skills. Each lesson includes a laboratory
and procedure component, along with handouts and study questions.
Extensive printable PDF files make this unit especially easy to
implement in the classroom. |
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| Writer's Workshop
is a technique for making daily writing a part of the primary
curriculum. The unit offers numerous strategies for incorporating
writing into daily classroom routine in various subjects, and includes
many examples showing what to emphasize in building a love of writing
and communication in even the youngest students. Additional materials
show how to extend Writer's Workshop throughout the elementary years. |
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The 50 States
TeachersFirst's comprehensive state resources remains a work in progress,
but it's well on the way to completion. There's a wealth of original
content here for student reports on history, geography and more. Students
will also find links to information on famous people and places in
each state. We're adding new states to this listing regularly! |
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| Signs in Stitches and
Song is a multi-lesson, interdisciplinary unit about the Underground
Railroad for primary students. Concentrating on the codes and signal
systems by which escaping slaves found their way northward, the unit
includes language arts, science, music, geography and math components.
The various elements can be used individually, or in combination.
There are extensive illustrations, printable handouts, optional Flash
animations, and suggestions for further study. |
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| They had a Dream
Too is a unit on overcoming obstacles for grades K-4. It offers
profiles of several dozen famous people and asks students to research
how one of these achieved success despite an impediment. The unit
can be used as part of Black History month, a culminating project
for a biography unit, or in any context studying accomplishments.
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| Our Martin Luther King
unit for grades K-4 offers language arts, math, and science activities
based around the principles of equality and non-violence which were
the hallmark of Dr. King's career. Printable PDF files make this lesson
unit easy to use in any classroom. |
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| Biomes of the World
is a unit that combines the basics on the world's different biomes
with a "biomes treasure hunt" that asks students to research
the characteristics of each biome. There are lots of ways for elementary
or middle schoolers to use this unit, either in class or as part of
an independent investigations. |
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| More poetry! This on-screen presentation of The
Highwayman - Alfred Noyes' famous poem - features pop-up guides
to poetic devices and vocabulary. Students can use these to familiarize
themselves with simile, metaphor, personification, alliteration, and
the like. Then, ask students to spot these devices for themselves
in the later verses. This one's a great on-screen activity. |
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Edgar
Allen Poe - The Interactive Raven - TeachersFirst's on-line
presentation of Poe's classic poem provides a built-in glossary,
as well as notations on the use of common literary devices in Poe's
text. Students can see these devices illustrated in the first half
of the poem, then spot them on their own in the later verses. Makes
the Raven come alive. The introduction requires the Flash player,
available from the TeachersFirst Toolbox. |
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| The Inventor's
Workshop is an introduction to major inventors of the Industrial
Revolution in the United States and England. There are profiles of
more than a dozen inventors, an inventor's quiz, and a list of other
resources dealing with inventors and inventions. Useful as a classroom
or independent study resource for upper elementary or middle school
students, this unit grew out of a winning lesson from one of our lesson
plan contests. |
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| Our favorite history unit - Frontier
Forts - offers elementary and middle school students a look at
the role that frontier forts played in the American Revolution. Students
learn how frontier children lived, as well as the differences between
the Colonial and British soldiers and fighting styles. A list of discussion
topics helps teachers integrate the content into their other lesson
activities. |
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| This unit is a tour of seven
East Coast settlements and the web resources associated with them.
Originally designed as a "summer tour," it also provides
a one-stop source for comparative information about early settlements
from St. Augustine north to Massachusetts. Choose your own depth;
there are resources suitable for students from elementary through
high school levels. |
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| If you work with high school writers, Pilgrim
at Tinker Creek offers a chapter-by-chapter reader's response
"starters" for Annie Dillard's evocative book about the
Virginia woods. Use as little or as much as you like; the "assignments"
are intended to get young minds moving. |
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| Not as strange as it sounds, Dante's
Infernal Grammar couples an introduction to Dante's Inferno with
a review of some of the more devilish elements of high school grammar.
Author Brenda Walton lets students discover how teens can encounter
some of the same personalities that appear in Dante's journey. Use
just the grammar, just the narrative, or pair the two. You'll get
surprising results either way. |
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| TeachersFirst's unit on Christopher
Marlowe has built its own international following. Built for high
school students, the unit examines Marlowe's life and works, and looks
at the relationship between his work and that of his more famous contemporary.
The text, illustrations, and lesson ideas can stand on their own or
enhance any Shakespeare study. |
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